I have read this thread and many others with great interest and would like to thank everyone for the invaluable education I am getting here.
As a newbie I do tend to watch, read, and absorb rather than jump right in. So, I may be biting off more than I can chew or placing my neck upon the proverbial chopping block here, therefore, please be gentle...I know it will only hurt for awhile.
Micheal, you have asked for suggestions and input on your WEB site. You have received many great pearls and that is a wonderful thing. I have refrained from commenting on you site as you pretty much admitted, in not so many words, that it is a work-in-progress.
That being said, the teacher in me will not make any comments on the product - yet
However, I would like to offer some input from a consumer's perspective on luthier WEB sites. Since you are all inside, I thought you might not mind a view from an converted outsider.
I am a musician as well as a teacher. I have acquired, learned, and still perform on 7 instruments. When I decided to add the guitar to my repetroire, I knew I didn't want a manufactured "box". There was something to be said about a custom made guitar. I'm sure many of you can come up with dozens of terms to instill a feeling that you derive from your guitars.
But, to me it is SOUL. I wanted a guitar that holds a part of a luthier's soul, his passion.
I went to many WEB sites and perused. There were many that I didn't get past the home page as they were intimidating, stuffy , too ornate, and gave me the sense that all that was being sold was a guitar. Then there were the ones that were too simplistic and said nothing to me. However, there were those that kept me hooked and reading.
Here are the attributes that were affective and are what caused me to "pick up the phone".
- Home page that was not too ornate, not too graphic, complimentary colors, and "to-the-point" link buttons. Tell me something.
-Once inside LOADS of photos with links to closeups.(Come on - luthiers like pictures - the consumer likes pictures too

) Seeing each guitar up close and personal was a plus. Music was great on most sites, but my chosen luthier didn't have that option available.
-What he had to say was a reflection of him. It was honest, to the point, and told me about his passion for guitars. I came away from his site knowing he was confidant, sincere, enthusiastic, and his guitars were as much a part of him as he was of them. He did this by talking of his artistic life journey (mission and goal are over used these days).
-Information. Most consumers don't know the lingo as the builders do - so don't use abbreviations and obscure terms. The woods of each guitar were listed, type of guitar, attributes, and size. Details in info equates detail in workmanship.
Bottom line was that what the luthier said about himself and his passion for his guitars drew me to him. When I made the trip to meet him he was everything his site made him to be. The kicker was when I picked up a guitar that he had just completed and I was blown away. It was loaded with his soul. That completed the package and sold me.
So, Michael, hopefully that gives you something, if anything to add to your "to-do" site list. If not, it might offer a little insight. I suppose one might say the passion in your guitar should be the same passion in your WEB site.
Jeanne
Jeanne38919.6888194444